How do I set a budget or a spending plan?
Dear Friends,
Growing up, I played baseball. In small town Indiana, Little League was big time. It was with great anticipation that I got dressed out for the games each week, and I would spend hours of free time daydreaming about hitting the game winning home run. My love for baseball stretched into my high school years, and then when I married and moved to Atlanta in the early 1970s, my family enjoyed having a major league team to root for each summer.
One of the worst enemies of the home run is the foul ball. Just a few feet right or left of the foul line, and a beautiful line drive into left field becomes just one more strike in the count.
Budgeting and baseball have something in common. In both arenas, the fair territory is wide, but the foul lines help to keep the game honest.
As I said in the video, a “budget” or a spending plan is just a series of pre-made decisions that guide you as you spend your money so that you stay within your income. As you make those decisions and come up with that plan, you are, effectively, drawing the “foul lines” of your financial playing field. Extravagant vacation = foul ball. Weekend away = fair ball. Designer hair cuts every month = foul ball. Designer hair cuts every twelve weeks = fair ball.Do you see what I am getting at, here?
I think that when many people think of a budget, they call to mind a tightrope. They see themselves walking a razor-thin line of demanding financial pressures. In my experience counseling with people, however, the only kind of spending plan that works is one with a wide “fair territory” and clearly marked “foul lines.”
To create a spending plan that has fair territory and clear foul lines, follow the three steps I outlined in the video:
As I said, this process will take time and it will also take communication with your spouse. Be sure to give yourself a few months to track spending, some time to put a plan in place, and then several months to manage and control your expenses to fit within your plan.There is a downloadable Excel spending plan form on our website. You can paste this link into your browser and get to it (http://www.masteryourmoney.com/sfm-participant.html), or from the www.masteryourmoney.com home page, you can click on the Surviving Financial Meltdown study and find it in weeks two or three under the participant resources.
If you follow the budgeting process and give yourself the grace and time to create a plan, you will find that budgeting is more like baseball than like a tight-rope walk. As you do your best making financial decisions, you will know when a choice falls into fair territory or when it falls outside the foul line.
May God’s peace encourage you as you pursue financial wisdom and depend on His Truth.
Blessings,
Ron
Click here for the video transcript
Growing up, I played baseball. In small town Indiana, Little League was big time. It was with great anticipation that I got dressed out for the games each week, and I would spend hours of free time daydreaming about hitting the game winning home run. My love for baseball stretched into my high school years, and then when I married and moved to Atlanta in the early 1970s, my family enjoyed having a major league team to root for each summer.
One of the worst enemies of the home run is the foul ball. Just a few feet right or left of the foul line, and a beautiful line drive into left field becomes just one more strike in the count.
Budgeting and baseball have something in common. In both arenas, the fair territory is wide, but the foul lines help to keep the game honest.
As I said in the video, a “budget” or a spending plan is just a series of pre-made decisions that guide you as you spend your money so that you stay within your income. As you make those decisions and come up with that plan, you are, effectively, drawing the “foul lines” of your financial playing field. Extravagant vacation = foul ball. Weekend away = fair ball. Designer hair cuts every month = foul ball. Designer hair cuts every twelve weeks = fair ball.Do you see what I am getting at, here?
I think that when many people think of a budget, they call to mind a tightrope. They see themselves walking a razor-thin line of demanding financial pressures. In my experience counseling with people, however, the only kind of spending plan that works is one with a wide “fair territory” and clearly marked “foul lines.”
To create a spending plan that has fair territory and clear foul lines, follow the three steps I outlined in the video:
- Determine where you are already spending money.
- Decide where you want to be spending money in order to meet your objectives.
- Determine a plan to control your expenses.
As I said, this process will take time and it will also take communication with your spouse. Be sure to give yourself a few months to track spending, some time to put a plan in place, and then several months to manage and control your expenses to fit within your plan.There is a downloadable Excel spending plan form on our website. You can paste this link into your browser and get to it (http://www.masteryourmoney.com/sfm-participant.html), or from the www.masteryourmoney.com home page, you can click on the Surviving Financial Meltdown study and find it in weeks two or three under the participant resources.
If you follow the budgeting process and give yourself the grace and time to create a plan, you will find that budgeting is more like baseball than like a tight-rope walk. As you do your best making financial decisions, you will know when a choice falls into fair territory or when it falls outside the foul line.
May God’s peace encourage you as you pursue financial wisdom and depend on His Truth.
Blessings,
Ron
Click here for the video transcript


I would like to purchase rental property, but I do not know how to go about it. Could you give some guidelines as what should I look for and how?
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Ron, you hit a home run with this analogy! I had not thought of it that way before. Thanks for making it easier & less painful to budget.
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I am so grateful that Ron said that making a budget can take a couple of years. It has taken me many years before I really hit on the right combination and I had really wondered if I was doing something wrong because it took me so long.
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The best thing about this segment was the freedom from guilt in not getting a spending plan right the very first time. Ron, thanks for sharing with us that sometimes it takes a year or two to put one in place.
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I was so opposed to a spending plan in the beginning of my journey towards financial freedom. Now I couldn't do this without one. It is still a work in progress but I haven't fouled out yet. Thanks
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